THE SMALLPOX EPIDEMIC
... ...
... ...
... no means of knowing whether the same has been the case amengthe population at large.. *. X Owing to an alarm of smallpox, 1289 workmen in a large shipyard in Bremen, in 1888, were revaccsnated l with the same humanised lymph of these 191 had ...
... land at Loch Uiskivah. They found shelter at some crofters' hoases. - ______ ,THE SMALLPOX EPIDEMIC IN EXGLAND.-The Register-General reports that during the past week smallpox caused 25 deaths in Sheffield, :3 in Bristol, and 2 in Nottingham, but not one ...
... siinply ignored it. In Birmingharn a few years 0. a..o. out of 150t ca-es of smallpox 1300 bad been vaccnated; and 'r, Taunton, about the same time, our of 171 ca-os of smallpox 169 bad received this wonderful protection. Now, with such figures as these ...
... nexematous ernptions, as might be, instead of from Pi bc below ttose of real cow/pox, failure as a protection an J. against smallpox would be but a natural er - sequence. S. W., wbile;not giving a single hc material proof to back up his contention, ob ...
... the majority of medical l men; and, if I presume to believe thesm to be altogether mistaken in their method of pre- venting smallpox, why should I accept implicitly 2, their opinion as to the orizin of the disease ? And medical eslpporters of vaccination ...
... protesting against it. Assuming the very matter in dispute (whether or not vaccination affords any pro- I teotion againist smallpox), J. H. writes that clean- I linees would have to be universal before we had any certainty of protection against this dread ...
... the Board R-oom, Diamond Street, Aberden', an a, yesterday. Rev. John Calder presided. With M r regard to the prevention of smallpox the cleric M i sta-ted that circulars had been printed offering tic 1gratuitous vaccination and revaccination to be Ithose ...
... the a death of Mr Hector l'lean, late president of the Oxford University Boat Club, from typhoid fever. ANSOTEE3 case of smallpox was reported at Leeds *.s yesterday. DYsraesIA rmakes you nervous, andnerrotiuessm nakesyora dyspeptic; either ons renders ...
... wrote say- ing that his objections to compulsery vaccination !were strengtherned, because th e places least troubled ! with smallpox were those where the revolt against vaccination was most complete. Mr William Jebb, president of the society, in his annual ...
... mind your dealing, Iit's your shuffling I object to. Mr GoBsEs BR.ArsaUsY knows all about the origin , of the Sheffield smallpox epidemic. Hesays :-It is ,a judgment from God for the sins that are per- i petrated in the selling of various papers, herrings ...
... circu' r from thieBoardof Supervision dated7th February. 1-. anent pig-houses, and another dated lSth 1 ebrimr 1888, anent smallpox, which, along with the re- G' by the sanitary inspector, were read to the meet:.i!. The clerk stated that thie report had ...